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lender

/lend/US // lɛnd //UK // (lɛnd) //

贷款人,贷方,出借人,贷款者

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    lent, lend·ing.

    • : to grant the use of on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
    • : to give on condition that it is returned and that interest is paid for its temporary use.
    • : to give or contribute obligingly or helpfully: to lend one's aid to a cause.
    • : to adapt to something: The building should lend itself to inexpensive remodeling.
    • : to furnish or impart: Distance lends enchantment to the view.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    lent, lend·ing.

    • : to make a loan.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Twinco Capital also has a debt facility with the Spanish investment bank EBN Banco de Negocios, which is common for any type of lending company.

  • Initially, she finds excuses – a visit to check in on her “neighbor” at the hospital, an offer to lend a hand with the various burdens of care – but when these begin to wear thin, her efforts escalate.

  • Unlike mortgage originators, which lend money to the borrower, a mortgage servicer interfaces with the borrower for the duration of their loan – and that can be anywhere from 15 to 30 years.

  • We've written a number of times about why Animal Crossing's chill, landscape-tending gameplay lends itself perfectly to our current stuck-inside-amid-a-pandemic moment.

  • My experiences as a mother to my son, George, have also lent inspiration to my work, especially my founding of the Fabrics Matter Movement.

  • In 2008, his monastery was in desperate need of funds and Vreeland decided to lend a hand with his first photography exhibition.

  • His play The Hairy Ape, the agent noted, “could easily lend itself to radical propaganda.”

  • After seeing the film, he also agreed to lend his synthesized voice to the latter portion.

  • Is it that collectivist cultures such as those in Asia lend themselves to this nature of group sexual crime?

  • Lakeside in Texas, baked by the heat, Louganis described how Red Bull got him to lend his credibility to the competition.

  • Other orchestra leaders are always writing and begging him to lend them his copies of Oratorios, etc.

  • Then he held down a hand to her, bade her set her foot on his, and called with an oath to Rabecque to lend her his assistance.

  • The human species,” Charles Lamb says, “is composed of two distinct races, the men who borrow and the men who lend.

  • He took me to the house of a musical friend of his who was to lend me his grand piano, and there we tried our sonata.

  • To this the great do not care to lend their ears, and the small have not wings strong enough to fly so far.